gamervivek
Senior member
- Jan 17, 2011
- 490
- 53
- 91
Huh? Looks like the 18k score was achieved with two cards, the 13k with one.
I was talking of the graphics score not the total score.
Huh? Looks like the 18k score was achieved with two cards, the 13k with one.
I guess it depends upon your perspective. My understanding has been that P10 is meant to be a replacement at the current 370/380 pricepoint (with x-models coming in the future as yields improve?), while delivering 390x (or better?) performance... basically what AMD has said all along, bringing VR-capability to more affordable price points... rather than a replacement for the already VR-capable 390/x and Fury/X cards. The direct competitor to the 1070 and 1080 cards, e.g. 490 and Fury-next, should come in the form of Vega (11?).
I assume this means that with the launch of P10, the 370 and 380 cards will drop in price or be EOL'd, the 390/x cards will be EOL'd and the Fury/X cards will have their price lowered and/or clock boosted so their price/performance better aligns with the P10 470/480 cards and the NV 10x0 cards until Vega can launch.
1080p gaming:
Build 1: Core i7 6700K + $299 Polaris 10
Build 2: Core i5 6600K + $399 GTX1070
In 3 years, both of the GPUs are going to be outdated. The difference is an i5 6600K is a bottleneck in some games already NOW. Long-term, the Build 2 will require a CPU upgrade much faster.
1080p 60Hz is now peasant land and you don't need a $400-700 videocard for this anymore.
Polaris 10 doesn't need to win any benchmarks. Statistically speaking, forums such as ours are isolated from consumer reality. More than 85% of all dGPUs sold are in the $349 and below bracket. 80-85% of the high end is between $350-449. Less than 5% of the entire dGPU market buys above $449. Even if 1070 beats Polaris 10 by 25-30%, all that extra performance is a waste of $ for 1920x1080 60Hz. Why would gamers pay $150 more for performance they won't feel? It's not worth it. Looking at every review of 1080 and gauging stock Titan X performance, that's straight up 1440p or 1080 120-144Hz level tech.
1070 to me is a straight up killer 1440p card though. With overclocking, it will really open up huge performance gap over P10 at that resolution.
This is precisely why Nvidia embraced Vulkan despite the fact that AMD stands to gain more from it. At least in the short term.It doesn't help that most people online keep ignoring Digital Foundry data and other websites data that prove stock i5/i7 CPUs aren't fast enough to push 980Ti level graphics card at 1080p without a CPU bottleneck. Instead gamers use flawed benchmarks on YouTube where the comparison is with a GTX970, a much slower GPU.
hard to say without a card tested wouldnt you agree?
for me it seems up to 1440p Polaris will be the choice if price/performance is what it seems to be.
1080p 60Hz is now peasant land and you don't need a $400-700 videocard for this anymore.
Here are some CPU benches with current popular games. Some of these games really don't care much about the CPU @ 1080p with 980Ti, while others do.
Arguably one of the better looking games today runs great on old stock 2500K. Sorry for the rows of graphs.
Right now my system is very GPU-bound, upgrading my CPU won't improve performance in any meaningful way and upgrading to a QHD or UHD monitor will result in diminished performance at native resolutions.
Finally. DX11 was a joke.
Anyone who spent on a 980ti or Titan X is surely using DSR and maxed out AA where possible. At least that was my rationale for buying one of those cards. In terms of a monitor or TV resolution a lot depends on how far you sit from it.
Where'd you get this?Back to Polaris 10, the leaked samples C7 not bad for a notebook variant, 36/40 CU @ 1.26ghz clear faster than 390X.
Now imagine what a C10 40 CU @ 1.5ghz will do on the PC.![]()
^ i7 5930K + R9 390 provides a better gaming experience than an i5 4690 + Fury X.
We cannot continue using outdated data of the past where an i3 was almost as good as an i5 or an i5 was almost as good as an i7. In modern games, there are plenty of examples where this is no longer the case. This is why I continue to recommend i7 6700/6700K and i7 5820K (and soon i7 6800K) over i5 6600K unless budget absolutely cannot allow for an i7.
Some photos from Macau event - http://www.24liveblog.com/share/194237198?url=http://www.24liveblog.com/live/1331452
They obviously can't show products photos due to NDAA bunch of empty halls, and what I first thought were trash bags but turned out to be backpacks.